Toronto's Housing Shortage: Is It The Result Of Policy?

The region's growth plan may be throttling growth.

A "for lease" sign stands in front of a row of houses in a newly build subdivision in East Gwillimbury, Ont., north of Toronto, Jan. 30, 2018.

Most construction is condos, but buyers still want family homes

Developers may be delaying construction in anticipation of higher prices

42% of city's young professionals are considering leaving

TORONTO (Reuters) — Toronto, Canada's largest city and one of the world's hottest property markets, has a supply problem and the nation's housing agency admits it is not quite sure why soaring prices have not spurred more construction.

New homes replace demolished ones at a sharply lower rate than early this decade, completion times for multi-family projects have doubled and prospective buyers have far fewer new homes to choose from than only a few years ago.

The reason, in part, may lie in an ambitious growth plan for the greater Toronto area the Ontario province forged over a decade ago.

Watch: Toronto' s cost of living for young people soars by $400 per month

With new "density" targets favoring multi-family housing, designated urban growth areas and tougher environmental rules, the 2006 plan sought to check urban sprawl while supporting the area's further growth as North America's major economic hub.

The market, though, did not follow that vision.

Detached homes are still most sought-after and their tight supply keeps prices high even as some condominiums and multi-family projects languish.

Reuters/Nichola Saminather

Developers say the growth plan, updated in 2017 with higher density targets, both created a demand-supply mismatch and added a layer of new municipal regulations.

Ryerson University economist Frank Clayton said part of the problem was the plan's emphasis on protecting the environment and heritage sites at the expense of development.

"That superimposed more planning on a planning structure that was already bureaucratic-heavy," he said in an interview.

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Toronto's troubles are of national concern given its role as Canada's top financial and technology hub, which, together with surrounding towns, accounts for a fifth of the nation's economy.

The city, alongside Vancouver, is also among top North American destinations for international property investors and a major draw for Chinese capital.

"We're replacing houses in Toronto at a much lower rate than we were five or six years ago." Evan Siddall, CMHC

So far, the authorities have sought to cool what they call speculative demand with stricter lending rules and by taxing foreign buyers. Now they also begin to look at supply bottlenecks as a driver for prices that have risen by 43 percent in Toronto and 63 percent in Vancouver just over the past three years.

"If I were concerned about anything from a long-term housing market point of view it's the supply of housing in Toronto and Vancouver," Evan Siddall, the head of the federal housing agency, the Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation, told Reuters.

"We're replacing houses in Toronto at a much lower rate than we were five or six years ago," he said.

The agency's data, first published by Reuters, show just over 20 new homes were built in Toronto for each one demolished in 2016, down from around 70 to one in 2011.

Data from property research firm Altus Group offered a different perspective: it estimated last year prospective buyers had about 11,000 properties to choose from in the greater Toronto area, less than half the level of just two years earlier.

'Land banking' and red tape

Siddall said "simpler, more flexible" approval procedures would help, but developers were also contributing to the bottlenecks by "land banking" — delaying projects in anticipation prices will rise further.

In a report this month, the agency said, however, that it needed more data to fully understand the factors behind supply constrains.

Industry representatives said complex regulation, rather than speculation, drives the delays.

Michael Pozzebon, vice president of low-rise developer DG Group, said his firm used to sell houses once it got approvals because in the past it knew how long projects would take.

"To sell at that point now, there's a risk that we can't deliver the product on time. So there's a perception that we're holding on to land without developing it," he said.

Canada's most regulated city

A 2016 survey of land use regulations by the Fraser Institute, a public policy think-tank bears out developers' assessment. The survey found Toronto was Canada's most regulated city, with approval times nearly double that in other centers, and the highest compliance costs, followed by Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary and Montreal.

Developers now have to satisfy about 200 conditions, from protecting species at risk to transport requirements, to get municipal approval, according to Bryan Tuckey, former head of the Torontoarea's building and developer lobby. That compared with about 25 at the start of the last decade, he said.

East Gwillimbury, a town just north of Toronto, is a case in point.

The plan designated it as a significant growth area, but the municipality is at least six years behind with construction of a new sewage plant needed for the town's population to grow from 30,000 to 86,000 by 2031. The reason? A municipal funding shortage and delayed environmental assessments by the province, says James Young, town councilor and former mayor.

"Without the servicing, we stop. It's been very frustrating," Young said.

Earlier on HuffPost Canada:

Developers said municipal cash is tight in part because planned condominiums take longer than expected to complete, or do not get built at all, and that means less income from development fees that help fund infrastructure.

The municipality acknowledged it depends on development fees to repay infrastructure debt, but said the fees did not play a part in the plant's delay.

Despite the growth plan's preference for multi-family housing, such projects can now take more than three years to complete, double what it was 15 years ago, because of a surge in required documentation, out-of-date municipal zoning bylaws and residents' opposition to high-rise projects, according to development lobby BILD.

Larry Clay, from Ontario's Growth Secretariat at the Ministry of Municipal Affairs, rejected criticism that there was too much regulation, but said new guidelines due this year will ensure its consistent interpretation by municipalities.

Leaving Toronto

Housing shortage poses a stern challenge for Toronto and its surrounding cities, with the Ontario government predicting the area's population will soar to 9.6 million by 2041 from about 6.5 million in 2016.

A survey published by the Toronto Region Board of Trade this month showed 42 percent of young professionals were considering leaving because of the lack of affordable housing.

Matthieu St-Pierre, a video game developer with a 3-1/2-year-old son, is one such example. With his wife, a marketing employee at the University of Toronto, he now rents a one-bedroom apartment and plans to move to Quebec City after a fruitless search for a home large enough for his family within their budget.

"If you have a kid, you need more than 900 square feet of space," St-Pierre said. Ontario's focus on higher density housing made sense, he said, but developers skewed toward too many small, one-bedroom units.

Election issue

Housing is set to play a central role in the provincial election in June with the opposition Progressive Conservatives accusing the ruling Liberal party of contributing to soaring home prices with excessive regulation.

According to an Ipsos survey commissioned by the Ontario Real Estate Association last year, 85 percent of residents want political parties to tackle home affordability and 63 percent want less regulation.

David Caplan, who authored Ontario's "Places to Grow" plan in 2006 while serving as its infrastructure minister, said it better defined the roles of provincial and municipal governments in planning and aimed for a healthy mix of housing options.

But Caplan, now chief operating officer of the Ontario Road Builders' Association, acknowledged some 12 years later the province was still trying to find the right balance between suburban and urban growth.